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I Think The Cane Should Be Bought Back Into The School System

I am a product of my upbringing and education - born in the 1950s, became a teenager in the mid-sixties, and a long-haired rebel at the start of the 1970s.....

When I was very young (5 or 6, maybe) my mother would occasionally slap us - I have 2 older sisters, who are two and three-and-a-half years older than me - but nothing more than that. At primary school persistent offenders would sometimes be punished in assembly - rulered on the hands and occasionally the legs, by the headmistress.
At the age of about 7, I moved to a small prep school just over 3 miles from home. To say the cane was used infrequently would be an understatement - I think I only ever heard the headmaster announce once in assembly that he'd caned some boys the previous day: for throwing stones. He was very solemn and said it was five years (if I remember correctly) since he'd last been obliged to use the cane.....

At Grammar School the cane was administered by the headmaster only - and always in the privacy of his study - although various teachers had a penchant for using a gymshoe in front of the whole class.

I was by no means a goody-goody but, on the other hand, I didn't court danger either - I went through the whole of my school career having suffered only a couple of rulerings on the hands at prep school and a couple of whackings with a gym shoe over PE shorts!

From my own experience I can say that I certainly approve of corporal punishment as a deterrent - overuse, however, I'm sure, lessens its effectiveness though. From a child's perspective, the playground whispers about getting the cane certainly added to the mystique......
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Lynda70 · F
How effective was it really? At my school the cane was in regular use and not a day passed without there being several slipperings somewhere in the school.

Did it cease to be effective because it was used so much or was it used so much because it was ineffective? Perhaps it was a combination of both, not particularly effective and rendered less so through overs use - due to it not being effective in the first place.

Some schools explicitly exempted girls from CP. That amounts to an admission they had other methods they were absolutely confident would be so effective they would never need to use CP. Why use ineffective methods when you have far better methods available?
ArtieKat · M
@Lynda70 In my own case I think the deterrent factor worked. And, of course, I can only talk from personal experience.
Lynda70 · F
@ArtieKat I agree it probably worked in some cases but that doesn't mean other methods wouldn't have worked. It didn't work for my peers or me, possibly partly through over use. My husband says it didn't really work for him and his peers, possibly for the same reason.

CP has also been shown to cause serious psychological harm and, in a lot of case, was used to cover up abuse. I think the downsides outweight the possible benefits.

Consensual CP between adults is a different matter.